China-bound illegal donkey hide haul seized in Pakistan by Staff Writers Karachi (AFP) April 27, 2017 Pakistani police have confiscated more than 4,000 donkey hides that were set to be illegally exported to China where they are highly sought after for their use in traditional medicine, officials said Thursday. Six people in a smuggling ring, including a Chinese national, have also been arrested in connection with the case, Israr Afridi, a police officer in the port city of Karachi where the incident took place told AFP. "We received a tip-off that the contraband, which was brought from Lahore, was hidden in a shop," he said. Customs official Ali Raza added: "It seems to be a bigger racket and we are investigating more leads." Donkey-hide gelatin has no commercial value locally but is highly sought after in China as an ingredient for traditional medicine to treat health problems such as anaemia and menopause-linked ailments. Hooves also contain gelatin while the meat, consumed in parts of China, is believed to be more nutritious than beef. The gelatin, known in China as ejiao, is dissolved into hot drinks, or mixed with nuts and seeds as a snack. China is making efforts to source donkey hides from abroad as its own native population declines. Donkey numbers in China have nearly halved from 11 million in the 1990s to six million in 2013, according to the country's national animal husbandry yearbook. Earlier this month, Pakistan's northwestern province of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa signed an agreement with the Chinese government for the legal export of the animal called the "Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa sustainable donkey development programme". "We plan to export 200,000 donkeys to China during the first phase," provincial information minister Mushtaq Ghani told AFP.
Vienna (AFP) April 26, 2017 Making wine is a tough job in most places, what with frost, hail, drought and bushfires to contend with. But nowhere is the task bigger than in Argentina's Mendoza region, where vintners duel "the whole gamut of natural hazards" - not least frequent earthquakes, according to research unveiled on Wednesday. The region tops a new index of wine areas most targeted by Nature's wrath. "W ... read more Related Links Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology
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